"We Are The New Vintage"
Tags:
Harlean Carpenter
Your question concerning film versus digital images is a false dichotomy.
Are this above images photographs?
Because using your definition, they may not be since they are highly manipulated or as we used to call it "re-touched"
Understand that Photoshop merely replicates and makes easier what you once did in a photoshop.
Instead of using a computer, you used to use chemicals, enlargers, airbrushes, sharp needles and erasers. It was actually quite easy to retouch large format neg's and glass plates
So it isn't between film or digital, it's about image manipulation.
It's still a photograph, just a shitty manipulated one.
[edited to remove photos]
using the same tools that would be used for basic retouching, at what point did it cease to be a photograph? In my mind, the second is absolutely not a photograph any longer, it's a digital image. That's an extreme example of what I mean when I say an image I can look at and tell immediately that it's been manipulated.
I may be late in the game but was honestly having the same (less indepth) conversation with a friend recently. I'm a art major, artist and photographer. I see a fine line. I like my images to be the image I see in my frame, not a starting off point, but I also love the minor edits I can make in PS to make my images sing. To each his own. I have processed in a dark room - edited film and photos with chemicals in a dark room, and shoot both film and digital. I definately feel that film has a different depth quality, but love the freedom of easy digital manipulation. I don't recreat my imagery, only enhance certain qualitys. I don't think photos looked finished w/out some retouching/enhancing. For me, it's all about the final product....I like my photos to look "real", but really appreciate the digital artist that takes a concept over the top. "Mixed medium" and art no matter how you look at it. Just like someones pallet, it's all a matter of personal taste.
Have a great day!
But to answer the main question...IMO, if you took it with a camera, it's a photograph.
Miss Jenna said:I may be late in the game but was honestly having the same (less indepth) conversation with a friend recently. I'm a art major, artist and photographer. I see a fine line. I like my images to be the image I see in my frame, not a starting off point, but I also love the minor edits I can make in PS to make my images sing. To each his own. I have processed in a dark room - edited film and photos with chemicals in a dark room, and shoot both film and digital. I definately feel that film has a different depth quality, but love the freedom of easy digital manipulation. I don't recreat my imagery, only enhance certain qualitys. I don't think photos looked finished w/out some retouching/enhancing. For me, it's all about the final product....I like my photos to look "real", but really appreciate the digital artist that takes a concept over the top. "Mixed medium" and art no matter how you look at it. Just like someones pallet, it's all a matter of personal taste.
Have a great day!
I had actually continued this conversation with a few other people over the past week. At the end of the day, it really does seem to come down to being more of a semantic issue than an artistic or technical one. The technology has moved and changed so quickly that the language is still struggling to catch up. I'm just always curious about people's thoughts on these types of things
Miss Jenna said:But to answer the main question...IMO, if you took it with a camera, it's a photograph.
Miss Jenna said:I may be late in the game but was honestly having the same (less indepth) conversation with a friend recently. I'm a art major, artist and photographer. I see a fine line. I like my images to be the image I see in my frame, not a starting off point, but I also love the minor edits I can make in PS to make my images sing. To each his own. I have processed in a dark room - edited film and photos with chemicals in a dark room, and shoot both film and digital. I definately feel that film has a different depth quality, but love the freedom of easy digital manipulation. I don't recreat my imagery, only enhance certain qualitys. I don't think photos looked finished w/out some retouching/enhancing. For me, it's all about the final product....I like my photos to look "real", but really appreciate the digital artist that takes a concept over the top. "Mixed medium" and art no matter how you look at it. Just like someones pallet, it's all a matter of personal taste.
Have a great day!
© 2024 Created by PL Team. Powered by
ABOUT | WHY YOU'LL ♥ PL | INFO / QUICK LINKS |
"We are the new vintage. Uniting the
|
|
|